SpaceX surged 14% on its first day of public trading, pushing its market cap above $2.4T.
That makes it bigger than TSMC - the company that manufactures most of the advanced chips powering AI.
A rocket company is now worth more than the backbone of the AI industry.
The market is betting that the next trillion-dollar opportunity isn't just AI on Earth, but infrastructure in space.
DeFi protocol Ekubo lost $1M in wrapped bitcoin after attackers exploited an access control flaw in its EVM swap router.
The exploit hit wallets that had previously approved the router contracts. Ekubo is urging all users to revoke approvals now.
Russia-linked crypto exchange Grinex suspended all trading and withdrawals after hackers drained $15M from its wallets.
The stolen funds were quickly converted from USDT into TRX and ETH, likely to avoid a Tether freeze.
Every time the S&P drops 1%, $BTC drops about 2%. This ratio has held consistently through every correction this cycle. Right now the S&P is sitting on its 200-day moving average, and if it loses that level, history says a 13-15% drawdown follows. That maps to Bitcoin in the low $70Ks, which lines up almost perfectly with the 2024 breakout retest zone. I'm not panicking, but I am watching that level closely.
1/ Highlight of @NEARProtocol over the last week:
🟣 Unified Commerce Layer thesis
🟣 Intents + AI + Confidentiality
🟣 1M+ TPS infrastructure vision
🟣 Intents growth + milestones
NEAR is going after something bigger than DeFi 👇
Gold market cap (Feb 2026) ≈ $35.2T
Silver market cap ≈ $4.2T
Together = $39.5T
If just 10% of that rotates into crypto, that’s nearly $4T of new capital.
Crypto market cap today ≈ $2.3T
Add $4T → Total ≈ $6.3T
That’s the power of capital rotation.
And remember - Bitcoin follows a 4-year cycle.
If history repeats, 2026 could be the next major low.
That’s where money rotates - from gold & silver into crypto, especially altcoins.
“If I put $100 in Bitcoin in 2010 I’d have $3B now.”
No.
If you bought $100 of Bitcoin in 2010 and watched it go to:
$1k → $100k → $2M
and did nothing
Then watched $2M go to $200k
and still did nothing
Then watched $200k go to $150M
and still did nothing
Then watched $150M wither to $25M
and still did nothing
Then watched $25M surge to $500M
and still did nothing
Then watched $500M deteriorate to $100M
Then watched $100M climb to $2B
and still did nothing
Then watched $2B shrink to $400M
and still did nothing
Then watched $400M surge to $3B
and then for some reason finally decided to do something…
Then yes, $100 in 2010 would be worth $3 billion today.